Parental awareness
There are significant gaps in parent awareness.
Parents have low awareness of their children’s contact with strangers:
• 55% of children communicated with someone they first met online
• yet only 34% of their parents were aware.
Parents underestimate the prevalence of bullying behaviour:
• 45% of children were treated in a hurtful or nasty way online
• 69% told their parents
• yet only 51% of their parents were aware.
• 26% of children treated someone in a hurtful or nasty way online
• 65% told their parents
• yet only 34% of their parents were aware.
Parental awareness is low when it comes to material about sensitive and stigmatised issues.
Young people are exposed to harmful online content more than parents realise:
• 62% of young people aged 14–17 were exposed to negative online content
• yet only 43% of their parents were aware.
This content included:
Gory or violent material
• 37% of 14–17 year-olds
• 24% of their parents were aware.
Hate messages
• 39% of 14–17 year-olds
• 21% of their parents were aware.
Self harm
• 25% of 14–17 year-olds
• 12% of their parents were aware.
Unhealthy eating
• 28% of 14–17 year-olds
• 15% of their parents were aware.
Drug taking
• 37% of 14–17 year-olds
• 17% of their parents were aware.
Ways to take their own life
• 20% of 14–17 year-olds
• 10% of their parents were aware.
Violent sexual images or videos
• 23% of 14–17 year-olds
• 11% of their parents were aware.
Parents have low awareness of young people’s exposure to sexual material online, such as:
Saw sexual images online
• 71% of 14–17 year-olds were exposed
• 34% of their parents were aware.
Received sexual messages from someone online
• 47% of 14–17 year-olds were exposed
• 16% of their parents were aware.
Opened a message or a link that showed pictures of naked people
• 25% of 14–17 year-olds were exposed
• 12% of their parents were aware.
Parents have better awareness of children’s other negative online experiences.
This included:
Met someone face-to-face after first getting to know them online
• 12% of children
• 10% of their parents were aware.
Clicked on a pop-up link and their device got infected
• 13% of children
• 12% of their parents were aware.
Were asked by someone on the internet to send sexual images of themselves
• 11% of 14–17 year-olds
• 10% of their parents were aware.
Had their personal information posted without their consent
• 9% of children
• 7% of their parents were aware.
Experienced hate speech*
• 11% of children
• 63% told their parents
• 64% of their parents were aware.
Source: Online survey of 3,590 children in Australia aged 8–17 and their parents, conducted July–September 2021. Data relates to the 12 months to July–September 2021.
*Had offensive things said to them online because of their race, gender, nationality, sexual orientation, religion, age, disability.
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Last updated: 14/02/2022